Faculty Publications
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Item Scanning and resetting the phase of a pinned spiral wave using periodic far field pulses(Institute of Physics Publishing helen.craven@iop.org, 2016) Shajahan, T.K.; Berg, S.; Luther, S.; Krinski, V.; Bittihn, P.Spiral waves in cardiac tissue can pin to tissue heterogeneities and form stable pinned waves. These waves can be unpinned by electric stimuli applied close to the pinning center during the vulnerable window of the spiral. Using a phase transition curve (PTC), we quantify the response of a pinned wave in a cardiac monolayer to secondary excitations generated electric field pulses. The PTC can be used to construct a one-dimensional map that faithfully predicts the pinned wave's response to periodic field stimuli. Based on this 1D map, we predict that pacing at a frequency greater than the spiral frequency, over drive pacing, leads to phase locking of the spiral to the stimulus, which hinders unpinning. In contrast, under drive pacing can lead to scanning of the phase window of the spiral, which facilitates unpinning. The predicted mechanisms of phase scanning and phase locking are experimentally tested and confirmed in the same monolayers that were used to obtain the PTC. Our results have the potential to help choose optimal parameters for low energy antifibrillation pacing schemes. © 2016 IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.Item Spiral wave unpinning facilitated by wave emitting sites in cardiac monolayers(Royal Society Publishing, 2019) Punacha, S.; Berg, S.; Sebastian, A.; Krinski, V.I.; Luther, S.; Shajahan, T.K.Rotating spiral waves of electrical activity in the heart can anchor to unexcitable tissue (an obstacle) and become stable pinned waves. A pinned rotating wave can be unpinned either by a local electrical stimulus applied close to the spiral core, or by an electric field pulse that excites the core of a pinned wave independently of its localization. The wave will be unpinned only when the pulse is delivered inside a narrow time interval called the unpinning window (UW) of the spiral. In experiments with cardiac monolayers, we found that other obstacles situated near the pinning centre of the spiral can facilitate unpinning. In numerical simulations, we found increasing or decreasing of the UW depending on the location, orientation and distance between the pinning centre and an obstacle. Our study indicates that multiple obstacles could contribute to unpinning in experiments with intact hearts. © 2019 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.Item Theory of unpinning of spiral waves using circularly polarized electric fields in mathematical models of excitable media(American Physical Society subs@aip.org;revtex@aps.org;prx@aps.org;prxtex@aps.org;help@aps.org;prb@aps.org, 2020) Punacha, S.; Naveena Kumara, A.N.; Shajahan, T.K.Spiral waves of excitation are common in many physical, chemical, and biological systems. In physiological systems like the heart, such waves can lead to cardiac arrhythmias and need to be eliminated. Spiral waves anchor to heterogeneities in the excitable medium, and to eliminate them they need to be unpinned first. Several groups focused on developing strategies to unpin such pinned waves using electric shocks, pulsed electric fields, and recently, circularly polarized electric fields (CPEF). It was shown that in many situations, CPEF is more efficient at unpinning the wave compared to other existing methods. Here, we study how the circularly polarized field acts on the pinned spiral waves and unpins it. We show that the termination always happens within the first rotation of the electric field. For a given obstacle size, there exists a threshold time period of the CPEF below which the spiral can always be terminated. Our analytical formulation accurately predicts this threshold and explains the absence of the traditional unpinning window with the CPEF. We hope our theoretical work will stimulate further experimental studies about CPEF and low energy methods to eliminate spiral waves. © 2020 American Physical Society.Item Mechanism of Spiral Wave Unpinning in the Belousov-Zhabotinsky Reaction with a DC Electric Field(American Chemical Society, 2022) Amrutha, S.V.; Sebastian, A.; Sibeesh, P.; Punacha, S.; Shajahan, T.K.We study the mechanism of spiral wave unpinning in the Belousov-Zhabotinsky (BZ) reaction with a DC electric field. The unpinning is characterized by the phase of the spiral tip around the obstacle boundary at the time of unpinning. We systematically measure the unpinning phase as a function of the chirality of spiral rotation, the initial phase of the spiral, the size of the pinning obstacle, the direction, and the strength of the applied electric field. In both BZ experiments and simulations using the Oregonator model, we observe that the spiral wave always unpins at a fixed position with respect to the applied field. The wave unpins when the electric field component in the direction of the tip velocity of the spiral waves becomes equal to a threshold field strength. From these observations, we deduce a relation between the phase of unpinning, the size of the pinning obstacle, the strength, and the direction of the electric field, and it agrees with our observations. We conclude from our observations that a retarding 'electric force' on the chemical wave is responsible for the unpinning in the BZ medium. Our results indicate that the 'electric force' is more effective in unpinning when the wave moves away from the anode than when it is moving toward it. © 2022 American Chemical Society.Item Effect of electric field chirality on the unpinning of chemical waves in the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction(Elsevier Ltd, 2024) Sebastian, A.; Sibeesh, P.; Amrutha, S.V.; Punacha, S.; Shajahan, T.K.We investigate the unpinning of chemical spiral waves attached to obstacles in the Belousov–Zhabotinsky (BZ) reaction using a Circularly Polarized Electric Field (CPEF). The unpinning is quantified by measuring the angle at which the spiral leaves the obstacle. Previously, we had found that the wave can unpin when the electric field along the direction of the spiral is above a threshold value. When we apply a DC field, this condition can be satisfied for a range of spiral phases, which we call the unpinning window (UW). With a CPEF, this UW moves either along the direction of the spiral (co-rotating) or against the spiral (counter-rotating). We find that when the field is co-rotating, it can take several rotations of the spiral to get unpinned. With a counter-rotating field, the spiral always unpins during the first rotation. We analyze how unpinning with CPEF depends on the electric field's relative speed, chirality, and strength using experiments and the Oregonator model. Our work helps to understand and control chemical waves. © 2024 Elsevier Ltd
